College football fans are celebrating the new 12-team playoff structure for the 2024 season.
Additionally, the slew of schools joining new conferences and the return of EA Sports College Football 25 make this season one of the most intriguing in recent history.
The race to capitalize on new opportunities is most evident in the number of major renovations happening across college football.
For example, the University of Tennesee increased its budget by $49 million to total $337 million with the renovations scheduled to finish up in 2026. This will land them among the most expensive college football stadiums upon completion.
Currently, Kyle Field in College Station, TX is the most expensive college football stadium. It cost a combined $650.4 million in inflation adjusted dollars to originally build in 1929 and later renovate in 2015.
Home of Texas A&M, Kyle Field is the fourth largest stadium in the country with a seating capacity of 102,733.
The latest renovations included lowering the playing field by seven feet to add six rows of seats, new strength and conditioning training areas, and new interior scoreboards.
It remains the most expensive college football stadium, at least until Northwestern completes its estimated $800 million new stadium in 2026.
Second on the list is Notre Dame Stadium, with construction costing a total of $572.41 million in inflation adjusted dollars.
“The House that Rockne Built” was constructed in 1930 for $750K, which comes to $14.1 million today. In 2017, Notre Dame decided to modernize the stadium in its largest building project in school history.
The 2017 project surpassed renovations made in the 90s that cost $53 million to add new seating, permanent lighting for two new scoreboards, and a new press box.
The University of Minnesota, Baylor University, and Colorado State University made the list as the only colleges with recently constructed stadiums. Combined, their construction costs total $1.08 billion in inflation adjusted dollars.
With billions of dollars expected to flow into the sport through media rights deals, college football stadiums are on track to approach construction costs of NFL stadiums.
Ranking The Most Expensive College Football Stadiums
Here is the list of the top 10 most expensive college football stadiums, adjusted for inflation, compiled with historical cost reports from CNN, the NCAA, Texas A&M Athletics, University of Washington Magazine, and more.
- Updated: August 16, 2024
Rank | Stadium | College | Location | Original Construction Costs | Renovation Costs | Total Construction Cost (Inflation Adjusted) |
1 | Kyle Field | Texas A&M | College Station, TX | $365K (1929) | $485 million (2015) | $650.4 million |
2 | Notre Dame Stadium | Notre Dame | South Bend, IN | $750K (1930) | $400 million (2017) | $527.4 million |
3 | California Memorial Stadium | University of California, Berkeley | Berkeley, CA | $1.4 million (1923) | $321 million (2012) | $466.2 million |
4 | Huntington Bank Stadium | University of Minnesota | Minneapolis, MN | $303 million (2009) | – | $444.2 million |
5 | Alaska Airlines Field at Husky Stadium | University of Washington | Seattle, WA | $565K (1920) | $280 million (2013) | $386.9 million |
6 | Sun Devil Stadium | Arizona State University | Tempe, AZ | $1 million (1958) | $300 million (2019) | $380 million |
7 | Ohio Stadium | Ohio State University | Columbus, OH | $1.3 million (1922) | $194 million (2001) | $368.9 million |
8 | McLane Stadium | Baylor University | Waco, TX | $266 million (2014) | – | $353.4 million |
9 | Michigan Stadium | University of Michigan | Ann Arbor, MI | $1.1 million (1927) | $226 million (2010) | $346.5 million |
10 | Canvas Stadium | Colorado State University | Fort Collins, CO | $220 million (2017) | – | $282.3 million |
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